The Cantril Ladder elicits thoughts about power and wealth
Peer reviewed, Journal article
Published version
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Date
2024Metadata
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- Publikasjoner fra Cristin [3447]
- SAM - Handelshøyskolen [398]
Original version
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-52939-yAbstract
The Cantril Ladder is among the most widely administered subjective well-being measures; every year, it is collected in 140+ countries in the Gallup World Poll and reported in the World Happiness Report. The measure asks respondents to evaluate their lives on a ladder from worst (bottom) to best (top). Prior work found Cantril Ladder scores sensitive to social comparison and to refect one’s relative position in the income distribution. To understand this, we explored how respondents interpret the Cantril Ladder. We analyzed word responses from 1581 UK adults and tested the impact of the (a) ladder imagery, (b) scale anchors of worst to best possible life, and c) bottom to top. Using three language analysis techniques (dictionary, topic, and word embeddings), we found that the Cantril Ladder framing emphasizes power and wealth over broader well-being and relationship concepts in comparison to the other study conditions. Further, altering the framings increased preferred scale levels from 8.4 to 8.9 (Cohen’s d= 0.36). Introducing harmony as an anchor yielded the strongest divergence from the Cantril Ladder, reducing mentions of power and wealth topics the most (Cohen’s d= −0.76). Our fndings refne the understanding of historical Cantril Ladder data and may help guide the future evolution of well-being metrics and guidelines.